The Rajasthan government Wednesday told the high court that student union polls will not be conducted this year, citing the planned implementation of the National Education Policy (NEP) and suggestions from university heads all over the state. In a formal response to the court, the government stated that the prevailing academic situation makes it impossible to hold the polls.

Authorities invoked the Lyngdoh Committee recommendations, according to which student union elections must be held within eight weeks of the beginning of the academic session. They pointed out that the continuous academic calendar, reconfigured in the wake of NEP implementation, doesn't allow following this schedule.

The govt further informed the court that nine universities' vice-chancellors have recommended that the polls not be held this year. The officials, as per the submission, have cited disruption in class timetables and an uncertain academic structure as the reasons behind holding up the polls.

The issue was raised in the high court by Jai Rao, a first-year student of the MA course of Rajasthan University, who approached the court through a petition on July 24. Rao, in his appeal, claimed that the right to elect student representatives is inherent and asserted that elections never took place in Rajasthan for three consecutive academic sessions.

The court had heard the case for the last time on July 29 and asked the state to submit a detailed reply. In the meantime, student leaders from all over the state have organized several demonstrations in recent weeks demanding that the elections be conducted at the earliest.

There will be no additional new law colleges or law schools in the nation for three years, as the regulatory Bar Council of India (BCI) has declared a three-year moratorium on new centres of legal education.

"During the period of the moratorium, no new centre of legal education shall be opened or granted permission anywhere in India.". Additionally, no current centre of legal study can add any new section, course, or batch without prior written and express approval from the BCI. Outstanding applications that have not been given final approval as on the date of commencement will not be touched and will be dealt with according to law," Srimanto Sen, principal secretary of the BCI, said on Wednesday.

Justifying the decision, the council described it as compelled "to stop the deterioration in quality across legal education segments, demonstrated by the uncontrolled mushrooming of sub-standard institutions, frequent issuance of NOCs by state govt and affiliations by universities without checks, and to avoid commercialisation of legal education, indiscriminate academic malpractice, and continuing shortages of quality faculty."

With a proposed number of some 2,000 such centres of legal education already functioning in the country, the BCI feels that institutional capacity of the country is sufficient, the release stated, and the focus has to now turn towards consolidation, quality improvement, and systemic strengthening in public interest and in furtherance of constitutional obligations.

The rule, to be issued shortly for an uninterrupted period of three years, derives its power from the Advocates Act, 1961, and depicts the council's responsibility to uphold and maintain standards of legal education, preserve the integrity of the profession, and protect public interest in the administration of justice, it said.

Referring to a resolution passed in 2019 establishing a temporary moratorium of new law schools, and the later order of the Punjab and Haryana high court dated Dec 4, 2020, the BCI averred it also brought out a comprehensive press release of June 16, 2021 calling for strict diligence by state govts and universities.

"The current rule fulfills the direction of the court by implementing the steps through regulation rules and complements the Council's historic strength in quality," Sen added in the statement.

But there are a few exceptions. 

The rules exempt proposals exclusive to socially and educationally backward classes, SC/STs and economically weaker sections, proposals in remote, tribal or aspirational districts notified by concerned authorities and courses exclusive to individuals with disabilities.

"Such proposals have to meet tight requirements, such as valid NOCs, previous university associations, evidence of infrastructure and faculty capabilities, and meet need-based establishment under the Rules of Legal Education," the statement added.

A former Intel engineer, Varun Gupta, was making news throughout the tech world after being convicted of pilfering confidential documents from Intel, a world leader in chip manufacturing. Though his offense (the theft of "thousands of files") was serious, Gupta will not face jail time, but will not be able to escape public scrutiny or financial punishment.

What happened?  

Varun Gupta, a former Intel engineer, left the firm earlier in 2020. Shortly thereafter, he showed up at Microsoft, a top competitor (sometimes), partner of Intel in the world of technology. In investigating Gupta's resignation, prosecutors found out that he had downloaded and taken with him a significant amount of sensitive Intel documents. They contained confidential business information, proprietary design materials, and strategic negotiation insights, according to reports.

Gupta is accused of employing this pilfered information, not only to secure his new position at Microsoft but also to provide his new firm with an advantage in critical negotiations with Intel, a charge that has tipped the balance of the case heavily in its direction.

Information about the Sentence

The court's decision? Though everyone had expected a jail term for the magnitude and gravity of the cyber-plundering, Varun Gupta was given two years of probation instead of a prison term. In addition to probation, he also had to pay a fine of $34,472, about Rs30,21,510, both for the magnitude of the offense and possible damage done to Intel.

Why No Jail Time?

Legal observers say that a recommendation of probation over imprisonment may be a result of cooperation with the investigators, lack of a prior criminal conviction, and continued reform in sentencing for some white-collar crime crimes. The relatively soft sentence has, however, provoked skepticism and debate on social media regarding the effectiveness of current laws in addressing intellectual property high-value theft.

What Were the Stolen Files? Although the contents of the pilfered materials are not disclosed, prosecutors have identified the documents to include:

  • Product roadmaps and chip design files
  • Engineering and business strategy reports
  • Critical information that may be useful in competitive bargaining

Such information can offer vast leverage in the tech world, where intellectual property and trade secrets are the cornerstones of innovation and valuations of companies.

Contribution to Microsoft and Intel

  1. For Microsoft: No public record or public complaint exists that Microsoft benefited from Gupta's actions. But the company will likely review internal security and hiring practices to avoid any future occurrences and regulatory issues.
  2. For Intel: The security incident reflects ongoing threats for major technology companies when employees depart for industry competitors. Intel has since strengthened internal data security and confidentiality protocols.

Responses and Industry Response

The case has reignited discussions on:

  • The need for stronger cybersecurity and employee offboarding protocols
  • Stricter enforcement and harsher penalties for trade secret theft
  • The fine line companies walk when hiring talent from competitors

As the case of Varun Gupta gained the spotlight throughout the tech industry, it is a harsh reminder of the threats companies can face from within, and how information stealing can impact individual careers as well as significant corporate partnerships. Gupta's high-profile case is also a call to action for professionals and organizations to put data ethics at the forefront and protect valuable intellectual property from within and outside.

Higher Education department on Monday ordered all the state universities and colleges to report compliance on the internal committees (IC) as per Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace Act, 2013, within 24 hours.

In a communication to all the registrars of the public and private universities and principals of the aided, unaided and government degree colleges, the department asked for compliance immediately for strict enforcement of Section 4 of the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace Act.

Under this sub-section, all workplaces that employ more than 10 employees are mandated to set up an internal complaints committee whose role is to address the problem of sexual harassment as well as maintain a secure working environment.

The committee must be well represented by women members and external members. The institutions must display the names and phone numbers of all the members of the IC at public points on the campus within the reach of students and display committee members' information in the departmental HIMS portal. The department has also requested the institutions to display photos of geo-tagged campus locations where the information of ICs is displayed

Varsities & colleges ordered to file compliance reports

In a step towards raising awareness among the students and teaching staff, the HEIs have also been ordered to organize workshops on the Act at the earliest. The department also ordered the adoption of the UGC (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal of Sexual Harassment of Women Employees and Students in the Higher Educational Institutions) Regulations, 2015, by the institutions.

The move follows the revelation that FM College defaulted on the UGC regulation's requirements to provide ICCs compulsorily. The college had no operational internal complaints committee in place when the Integrated BEd 20-year-old student filed a complaint of sexual harassment by her department HoD on June 30. It was formed one day later.

Likewise, the UGC has also recently issued a call to all the HEIs to submit reports attesting to compliance with guidelines on not engaging in sexual harassment within campuses. The HEIs are required to upload the compliance data for the year 2024-25 on the SAKSHAM portal and the University Activity Monitoring portal.

The Bar Council of India (BCI) just announced a significant decision: no new law schools or law colleges will be permitted to open in India over the next three years. The decision, made on August 13, 2025, is aimed at preventing the saturation of low-quality legal education and providing improved quality for future attorneys.

Why Did BCI Impose the Moratorium?

BCI noted that many new law schools were opening up without inspections or verification, leading to poor instruction, absence of qualified instructors, and even education commercialization. The council also mentioned that these led to a decrease in the standard of legal education. With already nearly 2,000 legal education centers in India, BCI believes the moment now should be utilized in enhancing existing ones, and not in opening up new ones.

Key Points of the Moratorium

  • There will be no law schools or law colleges opened within the next three years.
  • Existing law schools are not allowed to introduce new courses, batches, or sections without prior, written approval from BCI.
  • Non-finalized pending applications will continue to be addressed according to law.
  • BCI will conduct further inspections of current colleges. Those that fail quality tests can be closed down or derecognized.
  • It has serious consequences, including withdrawal or revocation of degree recognition, and the students of such institutions may not be qualified to be enrolled as advocates.

Who Qualifies for an Exemption? 

Yes, there are few exceptions:

  • Institutions for socially and educationally backward classes, Scheduled Castes (SC), Scheduled Tribes (ST), and Economically Weaker Sections.
  • Colleges recommended in remote, tribal, or aspirational areas.
  • Courses specifically for individuals with disabilities.
  • State or central university proposals created by statute or proposed by the government.

But: All exemptions are subject to strict criteria. Institutions must submit genuine No Objection Certificates (NOCs), constitute faculty and infrastructure, and must comply with existing Rules of Legal Education.

What's the Impact?

  • For Students: You can be assured that your degree in law will be from a better college, and hence it will offer you better job prospects and professional standing.
  • For Colleges: It is the time to focus on increasing your strength of faculty, quality of education, and infrastructure.
  • For Parents: A stricter screening results in your kids getting admission to reliable law schools with credible degrees.

What Comes Next? BCI will be keeping a close watch on the colleges over this three-year period and will be enforcing compliance with rules. The council is calling upon cooperation from everyone—state governments and universities—to work for the good of the legal profession and society at large. In Brief: Three-year ban on new law colleges is aimed at improving legal education in India. Parents, students, and institutions should be informed of stricter controls and make the right choices regarding law colleges. If you need information regarding exemption or quality levels, always consult the Bar Council of India or your favorite university

The Supreme Court's (SC) July 25 ruling on students' mental health is a turning point in the nation's education scene shaken by an increasing spate of student suicides, much of it fueled by pressure of performance and high-stress environments such as at entrance examination coaching institutes.

The SC has given binding national directions to reorganize the way educational institutions address issues of mental health. A panel of Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta observed that India did not have a centralized, institutional response system to address student suicides and psychological trauma in educational institutions. The court reaffirmed that mental health is an aspect of the right of life under Article 21 of the Constitution.

The order asks all the Union territories and states to draft detailed rules within a timeframe of two months for regulation and registration of the coaching centers so that provisions of mental health and grievance redressal mechanism would be integrated into them. The regulations will be supervised by newly constituted district committees whereas the Union government has been asked to file a compliance affidavit within 90 days.

The essential message of the judgment is its demand that all education centers—school, college, university or coaching center—have a uniform mental health policy. The policy should be framed from the UMMEED Draft Guidelines, the education department's MANODARPAN scheme and the National Suicide Prevention Strategy, and revised each year. The institutions should have these prominently displayed on their websites and physical notice boards, and ensure transparency and accountability.

The ruling puts particular focus on the role of coaching colleges, which have faced growing scrutiny in recent years over the level of pressure said to be put on their students. Every coaching centre with over 100 students is required to have a full-time, trained counsellor. Others are required to have formal processes for referral in place to connect students with outside mental health professionals.

Student-to-counselor ratios should be kept low, and academic counseling part of the support structure. Certainly, the judgment prohibits separating children within class according to performance, shaming them publicly or overloading them with academic expectations which often lead to mental collapse.

The Supreme Court also urged strong suicide-prevention infrastructure in school settings. Schools should prominently publicize helpline numbers and create emergency referral systems. All teaching and non-teaching staff should undergo biennial training in psychological first aid and recognizing signs of emotional distress.

Parents are also drawn in by the preventive model: institutions will need to conduct periodic sensitisation programmes—off-campus or on-campus—to sensitise parents on identifying early warning signs of psychological distress, avoiding overloading students academically and offering emotional support. Not responding adequately or in time to such instances, particularly where neglect is a causative factor in a student's suicide or self-harm, will be determined as institutional fault, putting administrators in the legal and regulatory spot.

Also, the court has directed mental health consciousness, training in emotional resilience and life skills education to be incorporated into orientation courses and co-curricular activities. Schools and institutions of higher education are also required to maintain anonymous records of wellness programs, counseling sessions and awareness programs, and submit an annual report on mental health to their respective governing body, i.e., the University Grants Commission (UGC), All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) and Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE).

For residential settings, the court has also recommended architectural solutions, such as the installment of tamper-proof ceiling fans and restricting access to rooftops and other high-risk areas, to dissuade impulsive suicide attempts. Most importantly, all staff must be trained to handle sensitively and inclusively students who belong to marginalised or vulnerable groups such as SC, ST, OBC, economically weaker sections, LGBTQ+, as well as differently abled or struggling with bereavement, trauma or past history of suicide attempts. Institutions should also have confidential grievance redressal systems through which students can report distress or harassment without fear of stigma or retaliation.

This verdict is issued at a time when India's top coaching institutions, from Kota to Jaipur, Sikar, Hyderabad, Delhi, Chennai and Mumbai, are reporting a spate of student suicides with an alarming rise. Kota, widely known as the 'coaching capital of India', has now become synonymous with the mounting psychological strain that the nation's competitive examination system is subjecting teenage students to.

According to Kota police statistics, between January 2022 and February 2025, at least 24 student suicides were reported among the students attending the city's coaching institutions. Of these, 19 students took their own lives by hanging, three by jumping in front of a moving vehicle, one by poisoning and one by falling under a train. According to the findings, 11 of the victims were due to academic pressure, six to romantic affair, two due to sickness, two due to domestic disturbances, and two due to Internet gaming addiction. One was due to drug abuse. In nine instances, pupils had already indicated suicidal thoughts; three had tried before, and three others had suicide history in their families.

The timing too was indicative, with 17 of the 24 deaths between January and April, ie, before most of the competitive exams. Most revealing of all, perhaps, 'performance gap' was a decisive influencer. Some of the victims couldn't reproduce their Class 10 high scores, with 14 of them having scored over 80 per cent, and this was the element which seemed to tip them over. The gender split also helped accelerate the number of gendered pressure population: 21 of the fatalities were boys and three girls only.

Another research conducted by the Kota Medical College, involving 27 students who had killed themselves between October 2022 and September 2023, presented an equally bleak report. Twenty-five of the deceased were NEET preparers and two JEE preparers. Stress and depression were the primary causes mentioned in 20 of them. Alarming as the figures were, most of the students were teenagers —two were 15, four were 16, 11 were 17, and six were 18 years old—demonstrating the vulnerability of adolescents being led to super-competitive spheres.

The SC's intervention couldn't have come at a more opportune moment. The court's recognition of mental well-being as a human right and its demand for institutional responsibility is the paradigm shift that is needed. But the real test will be the extent to which these guidelines are implemented. Without funding, trained psy professionals and an enduring cultural shift—from repressive to compassionate—the guidelines might be relegated to paper.

If taken heed of, the verdict can not only that but by and large emotionally strengthen India's youth. In the fullness of time, it can put an end to drug abuse, gaming disorder and other adverse addictions prevalent among vulnerable adolescents. The SC has done its job; now it is the turn of schools, parents, governments and society at large to take this legal and moral call.

The Supreme Court on Friday issued far-reaching country-wide guidelines seeking mental protection and regulatory control over all schools. The government has moved after a gruesome spate of suicides by students, which the Court has called "systemic failure which cannot be ignored." Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta's direction will extend to all educational institutions — schools, colleges, universities, coaching institutes, training institutes, and hostels. Exercising powers under Articles 32 and 141 of the Constitution, the Supreme Court ordered these guidelines to be followed as law until legislation again.

The order came after a tragic incident of a July 2023 suicide of a 17-year-old NEET exam aspirant, who took her own life in preparing for medical entrance exams at Aakash Byju's Institute in Visakhapatnam. On a petition by her father, the Supreme Court ordered the probe to be handed over to the CBI in overruling an earlier refusal by the Andhra Pradesh High Court.

Increasing anxiety among youth

The Court pointed out that more turmoil in India's youth is an ongoing, intrinsic issue in the country's education system. Based on the figures communicated by the National Crime Records Bureau, it averred that India had 1,70,924 suicides in 2022, 7.6% of which — i.e., around 13,044 deaths — were students. In excess of 2,200 were due to examination performance alone.

In an attempt to respond to the growing issue of children's mental health, the Supreme Court has issued a series of national guidelines through government programs like UMMEED, MANODARPAN, and the National Suicide Prevention Strategy. The guidelines are standard and are to be implemented by each school and are marked by the following key steps: 

Mental Health Professionals: The Recommendations

Institutions having more than 100 students have to appoint at least one professionally qualified mental health worker like a psychologist, counsellor, or social worker. The smaller institutions have to have adequate referral facilities with outside specialists.

Suicide Prevention Helplines: Very conspicuous exhibition of helpline numbers like Tele-MANAS, through which the students can get directly linked.

No Segregation of Scholars: The schools and coaching institutions shall not segregate the students on the basis of performance, humiliate them publicly, or inculcate violent study habits.

Forced Staff Training: All the staff and faculty members are to be provided with psychological first-aid and referral training at least bi-annually. Sensitivity training for the management of SC, ST, OBC, EWS, LGBTQ+ group members, disabled and ex-trauma students is compulsory.

Secure Infrastructure: Institutions should have tamper-free ceiling fans and restrict access to the roof top and balcony in order not to facilitate spontaneous suicide attempts.

Grievance Redressal & Support Systems: Institutions should have confidential redressal processes for sexual harassment, ragging, or caste, gender, or religious discrimination. Such victims should be offered immediate psychosocial counseling.

Balanced Student Development: Institutions and schools can help decrease test anxiety by reframing success, encouraging extra-classroom activities, and interest- and aspiration-based career counseling.

Coaching centers in the country's big cities such as Kota, Jaipur, Sikar, Chennai, Hyderabad, Delhi, and Mumbai—well known throughout the world for their extremely competitive study culture—have been marked by concern priority to student well-being psychology and improved preventive infrastructure.

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